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Reddit mentions of Random House Webster's Pocket Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation: Second Edition (Pocket Reference Guides)

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Random House Webster's Pocket Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation: Second Edition (Pocket Reference Guides). Here are the top ones.

Random House Webster's Pocket Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation: Second Edition (Pocket Reference Guides)
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    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
Specs:
ColorPink
Height5.4 Inches
Length3.1 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2001
Weight0.29982867632 Pounds
Width0.6 Inches

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Found 2 comments on Random House Webster's Pocket Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation: Second Edition (Pocket Reference Guides):

u/raymondadvantage ยท 3 pointsr/ACT

If you're scoring 25's everywhere, you have a lot of content you need to learn.

Most of the 3rd party books are crap. Sorry. They are. I've read almost all of them, and it's filler.

I like Webster's grammar: https://amzn.com/0375719679
+understanding the rhetorical questions by using practice tests and making your own steps
Cheap math book: https://amzn.com/1592441300
Reading: Man, I've covered this on other posts
Science: a basic understanding of scientific concepts + practice

A 7-point increase is not easy on your own, but you can do it if you make a study plan and stick to it. You're going to have to search out why you don't get questions right if you don't understand the explanations. You're going to have to hold yourself accountable to your own knowledge level. Doing something that hard on your own is extremely difficult, but, if you can do it, you will be supremely prepared for college and will be a very successful person.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not in any way trying to discourage you from doing this on your own. The fact that you're on this subreddit and asking for help already shows that you are a lot more mature than your peers. Make a plan; stick to it; and re-evaluate it periodically.

If you go content-driven (which is the evidence-based way to increase your score the most), you're not going to get linear score increases. You might study for a month and get 1 point. Some weird click moment happens when things get easier and recall of topics starts to happen more. But isn't it like that for almost everything?